Wednesday, 26 November 2025

Hancock's Sahara Delusion



Graham Hancock is desperately clinging to the Sahara as one of the places in which his speculated lost Allerød Advanced Antecedent Civilization (LAAAC) "might have" existed. He has recently made the first concrete announcement about his new book (the first after the Flint-Dibble-Joe-Rogan Debate) and reveals his thinking about this.
"The Sahara Desert, green and fertile for 5,000 years following the end of the Ice Age (2012 reference*), is more than twice the size of the Indian subcontinent but has only been the subject of minimal archaeological investigation. Implications in the attached info-image.
Hancock seems confused. His speculated lost Allerød Advanced Antecedent Civilization is supposed to have flourished in... uh, the Allerød (pre-incipient Younger Dryas) warm period after the last ice age.

The Allerød was the latter part of the Bølling-Allerød interstadial (from 14,690 to c. 12,890 years Before Present, during the final stages of the Last Glacial Period), this was a period of major ice sheet collapse and the period begins with a corresponding sea level rise known as Meltwater Pulse 1 (between 14,700 and 13,500 years ago). During this episode, global sea level
 rose between 16 metres and 25 metres in about 400–500 years (4-6 cm a year).
Allerød temperatures (adapted from Obase et al 2012, via wikipedia)


  

This sea rise stabilised with the onset of the Allerod, which was a warm and moist global interstadial that occurred c.13,900 to 12,900 BP, in which temperatures in the northern Atlantic region reached almost present-day levels. But in this period, the actual Sahara was warm and dry. The "Green Sahara" Hancock talks about only came after a while. In the 2012 article he himself cites (!) the early and middle Holocene "African Humid Period (AHP)" is dated to between 11,500–5,000 years ago. In other words the Green Sahara dates to AFTER the end (END) of the Younger Dryas period (Younger Dryas cool period... 12,900–11,700 years ago).

Hancock conflates the whole lot and mixes events millennia apart. He says this lost civilization functioned in the period (i.e., Allerød) in a Green Sahara period before the Younger Dryas began ('with a bang' - he favours comet impact), then the sealevel rose rapidly giving rise to the world's flood legends.

He suggests that archaeologists have not found traces of his LAAAC because but the Sahara Desert "has only been the subject of minimal archaeological investigation". One wonders how he quantifies this. Firstly he seems to fall into the complete novice's misconception that archaeology is "only excavation". One would have thought that after all these years of him attacking archaeologists and their methodology and attempts to question and correct their conclusions, he would have made the effort to understand how archaeology actually works in the 21st century. He clearly has not the foggiest.

As archaeologist Scott D. Haddow (@sdhaddow) has pointed out :
I'm all for exploring more of the Sahara, but only 15-25% of it is covered by sand, the rest is exposed bedrock and gravel plains, so if there were any traces of lost Ice Age cities they'd be exposed on the desert floor and visible in satellite imagery. Exposed bedrock surfaces (hamadas) across the Sahara consistently yield evidence of human occupation dating back to the Paleolithic, but still haven't revealed any signs of a lost Ice Age civilization. Graham's right though: it's no coincidence that the drying up of the Green Sahara led to the emergence of the Predynastic Badari and Naqada cultures of the Nile Valley. Archaeologists have long made this connection. As the Sahara became increasingly arid, nomadic hunters/pastoralists were drawn to the Nile Valley and this eventually led to the development of Dynastic Egyptian culture, pyramids, etc. But this process took over 2000 years - it didn't happen overnight.
As for surveying and locating sites of the pre-Younger Dryas temperate period (c.13,900 to 12,900 BP), let us recall that in Hancock's current homeland, the British Upper Palaeolithic is characterised by the Creswellian Culture dated between 13,000 and 11,800 BP (and was followed by the cold spell, the Younger Dryas, when Britain was at times unoccupied by humans). How many Upper Palaeolithic sites are known from the whole of Great Britain? How extensive are the surveys where layers of this period are exposed on the surface ?

The same goes for the continental areas of western Europe, on the Northern European Plain we have the sites of the Hamburg(ian) culture/technocomplex or (15,500-13,100 BP) and the Federmesser group ('the late Magdalenian') and its variants dating to between 14,000 and 12,800 years ago (and then in the YD, the Ahrensburg(ian) culture (c. 12,900 to 11,700 BP. Again the same question, what acrage of exposed Upper Palaeolithic landscapes of the whole Northern European plain has been systematically surveyed compared with the extensive surveys of deflation areas of the Saharan desert by institutions from many countries that work there? The bibliography of the latter is pretty substantial - yet NONE of it is cited by hancock, who just cherry picks for texts that support his vision. It’s only “minimal” if you don’t bother looking for (or paying competent research assistants to look for) the multiple journal articles, field reports, edited volumes, and full books that cover archaeological surveys, remote survey, and excavations.
Justine “That Woman” Warren @adancingferret 12:23 AM · Nov 25, 2025
It’s only “minimal” if you don’t bother looking for (or paying competent research assistants to look for) the multiple journal articles, field reports, edited volumes, and full books that cover archaeological surveys, remote survey, and excavations.
I have a feeling that the 2027 book is going to be a real hoot. I wonder if the publisher will get an archaeologist as one of the pre-publication referees? 


References

*deMenocal, P. B. & Tierney, J. E. (2012) Green Sahara: African Humid Periods Paced by Earth's Orbital Changes. Nature Education Knowledge 3(10):12

Obase, T., Abe-Ouchi, A. & Saito, F. 2021, 'Abrupt climate changes in the last two deglaciations simulated with different Northern ice sheet discharge and insolation'. Sci Rep 11, 22359 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01651-2

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

Grifter-Illogic at Baalbek


This visualisation ( © 2009, Dennis R. Holloway Architect) perfectly captures the
setting of these Three Big Stones and the logicality of their siting.

 
The "classical history graduate" YouTuber Mike Button has a new video, this one replaying all the old talking points about Baalbek, Lebanon ("Archaeologists Can’t Solve this Engineering Mystery", Nov 23, 2025)

At the base of one of Rome's largest temples is a foundation that doesn't make sense. Three stone blocks each weighing 800 tons set seven meters above the ground. This site holds one of the most baffling engineering mysteries in ancient history and the deeper you look the stranger it gets [...] [bla bla]....
Another visualisation of the position of the Three Big Stones
© 2009, Dennis R. Holloway Architect).


Instead of asking an engineer to "solve the mystery" of these big stones in the front of the western facade of the podium of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus Heliopolitanus [note the suffixes of the name], he taunts archaeologists that he's found something he assumes they cant explain (but he actually ignores texts that do try to address the problem to avoid having to address the points made). He plumps for the Ancient Sea Kings, the Allerod Antecedant Civilization mythology as an explanation.

I thought I'd challenge him to defend that, by proposing an alternative explanation of my own as a comment under the YouTube video using his own logic (of ignoring "what the archaeologists say", faked incredulity, speculative "what-ifism", and cherry-picking). Let us see the results of him engaging with it. Will he?:
@PortAntissues 18 hours ago
I don’t know if there is a unit on logic in the “ancient history” course at Milton Keynes Agricultural College (or wherever you studied), but your thinking is not at all logical here. Bonkers.

You question the Roman date of archaeologists of the course of stones with the so-called “trilithon” (why do you call it that? They lie flat and NOT in the form of a trilithon). Yet you have no problems in accepting the same archaeologists’ Roman date for the structures above. By your own “logic”, they only “look like” a Roman temple. There may be Roman finds in the soil dumped around them, but that material is a terminus post quem for the layers themselves.

As for the style, we all know that throughout history people have been building ”Roman”-looking architecture [often reusing ancient elements – spolia]. A prime example is the ninth century Palace of Charlemagne in Aachen. The same goes for the Renaissance, Baroque and Roccoco buildings that ape the same basic classical forms and utilize classical elements, Neoclassical architecture (enlightenment to present day – with Donald Trump mandating that even today it’s the ONLY permissible style for public buildings in the USA).

So how do you “know” that the overlying elements are Roman – making the placement of the stones pre-Roman (and then on that base postulating an imaginary “lost civilization”).

If you are proposing alternative (contrarian) interpretations, why are you simply dismissing out of hand that the “Roman temple” above these stones could have been built closely-copying Roman style significantly LATER than the end of classical antiquity? Famously, it is ISLAMIC sources that speak of how stones were moved by "levitation" when building monuments like the pyramids. The Black Stone of the Kaaba was lifted by the clans on cloths, reportedly legends refer to a "magical papyrus" that was placed under some of the heavier stones; when the stones were struck with a metal rod, they would begin to float.

Why are you ignoring the fact that the three big stones of Baalbek (equivalent to the three jamarāt, in the city of Mina – devils = Baal?) COULD have been moved there and set on a raised foundation in early Islamic times, and then a building erected over them in archaizing style to give the impression that they and that foundation below them were older than they are? This may have been part of a sequence of local legends that are now lost. Prove it was not.

WHY did you not examine this hypothesis before simply ignoring it and plumping from one involving an imaginary lost/missing ancient Allerød Antecedant Civilization and thus misleading your viewers on the grounds “I have a degree in ancient history”, as if that gave anything at all compared to a solid grounding in archaeology? 😸😼
And I'll accompany this with a composite screenshot from Google Earth that reveals that what I said about Mecca checks out. The foundation wall below these three big blocks is aligned, actually, pretty precisely, on Mecca. Really. 


So, is his is an HONEST attempt to deconstrruct the Roman building-history of this complex, he needs to address the elephant in the room, that other deconstructions can exist - and until he produces actual evidence and cogent arguments, they are equally valid (and at the same time invaliddate his randomly-preferred "explanation"). 

For the record, I am personally convinced they are the same date as the rest of that wall of the podium and that, together with the bit of wall beneath them, was constructed in Roman times (see also World of Antiquity [David Miano] "Baalbek: Mystery of the Trilithon Stones" Apr 6, 2020).

A question we do not see being asked is (since the Three Big Stones form a logical whole in the  temple podium), what could have been the intended destination of the other two stones left in the quarry?  

Wednesday, 12 November 2025

The Sumerian King List


David Miano Everything you wanted to know about the Sumerian King List but were afraid to ask. 


The Sumerian King List is an ancient Mesopotamian text that records the names of rulers who reigned over Sumer, along with the lengths of their reigns and the locations of their rule. Written in Sumerian and preserved on several clay tablets (the most complete of which is the Weld-Blundell Prism in the Ashmolean Museum), the list begins with kings who supposedly ruled before a great flood and continues through various city-states such as Kish, Uruk, Ur, and Isin. Its early sections attribute impossibly long reigns—lasting tens of thousands of years—to antediluvian kings, blending myth and legend. After the flood, reign lengths become more realistic, reflecting a transition from divine or semi-divine rule to more historical governance.

Beyond its function as a chronicle, the King List served a clear ideological purpose. By presenting kingship as a divinely ordained institution that “descended from heaven,” it legitimized political authority and reinforced the idea of a single, continuous tradition of rule—despite the region’s actual fragmentation and frequent power shifts. Scholars believe it may have been compiled during the early second millennium BCE, likely under the kings of Isin, as a way to assert their legitimacy after the fall of the Third Dynasty of Ur. As such, the Sumerian King List is both a valuable historical artifact and a piece of political propaganda, reflecting how ancient Mesopotamians sought to impose order and divine sanction on their complex and often contested political landscape.

The Weld-Blundell Prism chronicles rulers with reigns lasting thousands of years.

Antediluvian Kings

1 Alulim of Eridu: Reigned for 28,800 years.
2 Alalngar of Eridu: Reigned for 36,000 years.
3 En-men-lu-ana of Bad-tibira: Reigned for 43,200 years.
4 En-men-gal-ana of Bad-tibira: Reigned for 28,800 years.
5 Dumuzid, the Shepherd of Bad-tibira: Reigned for 36,000 years.
6 En-sipad-zid-ana of Larak: Reigned for 28,800 years.
7 En-men-dur-ana of Sippar: Reigned for 21,000 years.
8 Ubara-Tutu of Shuruppak: Reigned for 18,600 years. Postdiluvian Kings

After the great flood, the reign lengths become shorter, but some are still quite long by modern standards:

Jushur of Kish: Reigned for 1,200 years.
Kullassina-bel of Kish: Reigned for 960 years.
Nangishlishma of Kish: Reigned for 670 years.
En-tarah-ana of Kish: Reigned for 420 years.
Babum of Kish: Reigned for 300 years.
Puannum of Kish: Reigned for 840 years.
Kalibum of Kish: Reigned for 960 years.
Kalumum of Kish: Reigned for 840 years.
[...]




'Side scan sonar of Atlantis off the coast of Cuba'.

 
'Side scan sonar of Atlantis off the coast of Cuba'.

Old Stories Given Credence by Ignorant Influencers


Continuity. Thousands of years ago, authoritarian elites made up an origins story to legitimate their rule. Now uneducated sheeple in the US enabling another autharitarianism seize upon the very same made-up timelines to legitimise their own beliefs:

Joe Rogan: “I’ve been really fascinated by the Sumerian King List. They’re the ones that have all this crazy stuff with the Anunnaki. It’s this list of people who ran the Earth for tens of thousands of years. Their reign was like tens of thousands of years, and then there’s this huge flood. Afterwards, the timelines become way more—it’s like, he was a king for 50 years. They have it documented to like eight kings over the entire course of their civilization, including the places that these kings ruled that actually exist. These are ancient cities that are actually built on top of even more ancient cities. And they had an understanding of stuff that was way beyond what we thought they were capable of. They have Pythagoras’ theorem 1,000 years before Pythagoras".

Bret Weinstein: “There is this increasingly fascinating thread about a recurrent disaster cycle, and the possibility that sophisticated civilizations get erased and that we rediscover.”





@joerogan @BretWeinstein

Some Things that Work


Anthropologist Chris Kavanagh (@C_Kavanagh), answering Sabine Hossenfelder (August 15th 2025) goes through "some things that work on YouTube" that are to some extent relevant to the pseudoarchaeology issue:
1. Present yourself as a renegade truthteller standing up to a corrupt establishment.

2. Explain that mainstream sources are lying to you, but your channel will provide the hard truths.

3. Imply nefarious forces are trying to censor you.

4. Flatter your audience that by following your channel, they are displaying nuance and independent thinking.

5. Present all criticism as bad faith- ideally, also frame as self-serving efforts to protect funding/authority.

6. Offer 'heterodox' takes that pander to your audience.

7. Make videos about culture war topics and if possible cite figures like Thiel, Musk, and Eric Weinstein.

8. Make some soft jabs at targets your audience likes to demonstrate your independence/lack of bias, but reserve your strongest venom for targets they dislike or disapprove of.

9. Cultivate desired parasocial attention by liking all flattering comments and ignoring/blocking anyone expressing critical opinions.

10. Engage in cross-promotional activities with figures who will endorse your renegade status and provide access to sympathetic audiences.


Monday, 27 October 2025

US You Tuber: Just Smash it All Up!




Questions and answers:
Jimmy Corsetti @BrightInsight6 7:21 PM · Oct 22, 2025
The most debated aspect of ALL of Gobekli Tepe is without a doubt, T-Pillar 43, BUT, did you know that it’s never been *fully* seen or documented? 🤯

WHY won’t archaeologists simply remove it so the *entire* Pillar and its unseen imagery can be documented and studied???
The archaeological team investigating the site has already made clear the reason. The pillar is a structural part of another archaeological feature. Maybe in the near future we can have a way to reveal all the pillar's motifs without compromising the structure.
But a US YouTuber thinks he knows better:
"Jimmy Corsetti @BrightInsight6 8:40 PM · Oct 22, 2025

That’s trash 🗑️

There is ZERO reason to not excavate Pillar 43.

How you could be an archaeologist and be content with this highlights why this once great Field is self destructing 👎🏻"
·
Jimmy Corsetti @BrightInsight6 · Oct 22

Are you crazy?? We absolutely have the capability to safely remove this pillar before dinner tonight